This wood has been sitting around a few years as extra from some other projects, but finally got a good project to use up a few more pieces.
Going through the pictures, this may be the most documented, tedious build I've done in quiet a while.. so this may end up a multi post walkthrough:
The concept model:
Everything started with a few rough slabs 2" thick:
I cut the pieces for the top and then milled one side flat so I could plane it and square them up:
squared and flattened (on one side)
time to plane them down to the same thickness:
joint test:
Then to start cutting up the remainder of the slabs for the cabinets and panels:
I originally wanted to make the panels single piece, but ripping 2" thick, 20" wide pieces down I found they had some bow as they were cut and the stress relieved in the wood, so that wouldn't work. So i decided to then bookmatch/butterfly all of the wood and do the line of symmetry at the center of each panel:
Then to cut up all of the framing:
I wanted a little more detail than just a simple raised panel in a frame, so I did a beader jack-mitre joint, which ive done sparingly in the past, but doing this many on this large of a scale with not much extra material, proved to be by far the most painstaking part of this project:
And with thicker corner legs, this led to some interesting joinery in the corners:
and the center panel dividers were just as tedious:
Going through the pictures, this may be the most documented, tedious build I've done in quiet a while.. so this may end up a multi post walkthrough:
The concept model:
Everything started with a few rough slabs 2" thick:
I cut the pieces for the top and then milled one side flat so I could plane it and square them up:
squared and flattened (on one side)
time to plane them down to the same thickness:
joint test:
Then to start cutting up the remainder of the slabs for the cabinets and panels:
I originally wanted to make the panels single piece, but ripping 2" thick, 20" wide pieces down I found they had some bow as they were cut and the stress relieved in the wood, so that wouldn't work. So i decided to then bookmatch/butterfly all of the wood and do the line of symmetry at the center of each panel:
Then to cut up all of the framing:
I wanted a little more detail than just a simple raised panel in a frame, so I did a beader jack-mitre joint, which ive done sparingly in the past, but doing this many on this large of a scale with not much extra material, proved to be by far the most painstaking part of this project:
And with thicker corner legs, this led to some interesting joinery in the corners:
and the center panel dividers were just as tedious: